This last weekend I took the ASA-103 Coastal Cruising class. Basically what this means is that now I can do two things. I can sail boats up to 35 feet and I can leave the shelter of the Bays in San Diego.
The class was out of Mission Bay, where I've never sailed, which has a very short motor to the open ocean. With the exception of a few hours on a skippered, chartered, boat a few years ago I haven't been in the open ocean in a very long time. I could tell it's been awhile!
Obviously a boat will move around on the rollers and wind waves but I was surprised at the bobbing nature of the ride. We had enough wind that we reefed the main and started with a reefed jib for the early part of the day. With 6-8 foot swells and wind blown white caps it was quite a ride! But i'm getting a little ahead of myself.
We started the day dockside in a Catalina 320, there were four of us plus the instructor Dennis. I liked Dennis and my crewmates right away. Dennis' dry wit matched my own and he is extremely knowledgable on sailing, and other, matters. We spent an hour and a half going over the boat bow to stern and boom to bilge. This boat has a Yanmar diesel that we were given a primer on operating and troubleshooting. While I like the simplicity of diesel engines, I have more to learn before I'll be comfortable in the middle of an ocean with one. It was good to get information that I'm always interested in but afraid to ask.
[Aside: it turns out that I'm not the only one who wants all kinds of nitty gritty details, that may be superfluous, but was afraid to ask. My classmates were interested in the very same things...]
So we pulled the speed sensor and saw it's encrustation first hand, we tested the bilge pump, we flushed the toilet, we cleared the raw cooling water strainer, we were given a brief primer on hailing technique, we reviewed the power panels, and even how many of the house acoutrements worked such as tables and berths and hatches.
With a working knowledge of the systems on our boat we headed out. It became immediately apparent that a 32 foot boat is much bigger than a 22 foot boat! From Quivira Basin in Mission bay it's a short motor out the harbor and into the channel leaving the bay. You're soon met with slow rollers coming in the channel from the ocean. :D We started bobbing... As I mentioned earlier the swells were substantial and we actually started taking them over the bow with spray all over. These were the exact conditions I hoped we'd see.
As we made our way out the channel we raised the main and reefed it. Once out in the open we partially unfurled the jib and killed the engine. It was such a change in noise and vibration, and oh so pleasant. But it wasn't a smooth ride by any means... We learned some interesting techniques for handling the boat like short stopping in a boat length while under sail and under power. I thought it was pretty amazing that we'd throw the wheel all the way over, control the main, but still try to allow it to luff, and just spinning in a circle for a minute before stopping completely. Simple as you please and all we needed to do to get into heave to was spin the wheel the other way at the right moment.
The rest of the morning was a pleasant sail with tacking, gybing, furling, unfurling, shaking reefs out and just basically boat handling in the swells. All these topics were challenging in the conditions we had but they came to all of us in short order.
The afternoon was spent learning anchoring, docking - both forward and backwards - in tight spaces, and a significant amount of time was spent on man over board practice. We finished up with a short sail back out the channel and back, just killing time till the 5-oclock end of our first day.
When i got home I was surprised at how tired I was. I also got some grief for being so sunburned... Put on sunscreen!
This was just a taste of ocean sailing and it was yummy!
Seaman Ray